Two sponsors drop 'The View' for hosts' lame nurse jokes

Miss Colorado Kelley Johnson competes in the evening gown competition on the first night of preliminaries at the Miss America competition at Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, New Jersey, September 8, 2015.
(Reuters)

The hosts of “The View” were forced to do some damage-control on Friday after two sponsors -- Johnson & Johnson and Eggland's Best -- dropped their ads from the show following jokes that hosts Joy Behar and Michelle Collins made about the nursing profession.

As the opening credits for the show rolled, an announcer revealed Friday’s show would include “real-life nurses are giving us a look at the life-saving role they play every day.”

Behar then walked on set and said, “We’ve been talking a lot about nurses this week, and today ‘The View’ is going to celebrate nurses. They are here… and we can’t wait to talk about all the great work they do.”

The controversial comments made by Behar and Collins came in response to Sunday’s 2016 Miss America pageant featuring Miss Colorado Kelley Johnson, whose talent consisted of a monologue about being a nurse. The next day, Behar said she did not consider the monologue a legitimate talent, and appeared ill-informed on the nursing profession as a whole.

Behar and her co-hosts apologized on Tuesday. However, the two companies announced they were dropping their commercials from the ABC talk show after receiving requests from healthcare professionals.

On Monday's episode of "The View," Behar said she didn't understand part of Johnson's nurse scrubs, asking: "Why does she have a doctor's stethoscope on her neck?"

Host Michelle Collins also remarked: “She basically read her emails out loud and surprisingly did not win.” She then jabbed, “She (Johnson) treats patients with Alzheimer’s, which is not funny, but you have to Google it (her performance).”

"'The View' trivialized the profession of nursing, referring to the nurses scrubs as a costume," a rep for the National Nurses United, the largest U.S. Organization of nurses, told FOX411 on Tuesday. "They also demeaned the role of the RN by referring to a stethoscope as a doctor’s instrument."

Johnson went on Ellen DeGeneres' show Thursday to defend her monologue and stand up for her profession.

"They work so hard and they are life savers and that was all the message I wanted to give," she said. "It’s about them, not about me."

A rep for "The View" did not immediately return FOX411's request for comment.